Tag Archives: Gallery

A look at the Pixel Tablet UI: Android, Google Camera [Gallery]

Besides sharing that the Pixel Tablet is powered by Tensor G2 and has a Charging Speaker Dock, Google showed more of the Android UI and several Smart Display-inspired screens.

Android for tablet

Google explicitly said that the “foundation for Pixel Tablet is Android, including Material You.” 

And just as our Pixel phones have always been the best and purest expression of Android, Pixel Tablet is the best way to experience Android on a tablet.

To that end, we see what the Pixel homescreen looks like on tablets. At a Glance, which is already getting a few upgrades with the Pixel 7, appears in the top corner and is again left-aligned, despite all that available horizontal space. Besides apps, the dock includes a Search bar with voice/Assistant and Google Lens access. The homescreen looks to be in a 6×4 configuration.

It’s interesting what apps Google chose to place and highlight on the Pixel Tablet homescreen. We see Recorder in an indication that Google will be updating the UI for tablets, which could look a lot like the existing landscape design. Along with Gmail, Drive, Docs, Sheets, Keep, the presence of Recorder reflects how Google told us it wants the Pixel Tablet to offer a good productivity experience, especially with the Workspace suite of apps.

Meanwhile, the tablet’s content consumption side is reflected by Google TV and YouTube, as well as Photos, though that’s also meant to reflect how image editing will be nicer on a larger screen. A more curious inclusion is the Personal Safety app. It’s not clear how exactly that will work.

We get another look at the dual-column Settings app, which is again set to Wallpaper & style. We see that the lockscreen without any notifications just centers the two-line clock. Otherwise, alerts appear at the right with a maximum of five lines and icons for everything else in a tray. Underneath At a Glance, we see an even larger media player. 

Lastly on the lockscreen, we have a Home shortcut that takes you to smart device controls. The main UI is unchanged and just a grid, but tapping reveals how controls appear as a right-aligned pop-up window for the Nest Thermostat. This UI preserves context and it would be good if that element made more of an appearance on Android. 

Smart Display UI on Pixel Tablet

When the Pixel Tablet is attached to the Charging Speaker Dock and showing slideshows, the time and At a Glance appear in the corner, while the top-right features a Cast icon that notes “This tablet.” 

Accessing Google Assistant when docked loads a bottom sheet UI that spans the entire width of the screen. (Going slightly narrower would not hurt.) This is the opposite of the Nest Hub showing command transcripts at the top, while Google is taking heavy inspiration for docked music controls. The Now Playing screen is very similar to the Smart Display version with large cover art, scrubber, play/pause, shuffle, rewind, and even Cast controls.

Android tablet apps

Google also provided a look at a handful of new tablet-optimized apps, and noted how it “partnered closely with developers to make sure apps take advantage of large screen features like split screen and stylus support.”

  • Google Home: The design shown at I/O was based on the previous iteration. This new one still uses a navigation rail, but looks much better with five tabs instead of just two. We see the Favorites screen take advantage of the additional space for what should be a great tablet experience. We also get a look at the camera stream UI.
  • Google Camera: Taking cues from version 8.7 on the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro, we have app controls housed at the left. This includes a top-left corner settings dropdown and a pill-shaped controller.
  • Google One: Another look at the app, which looks like the website, and is still not yet live. 

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Here are Pixel 7 Pro Super Res Zoom camera samples [Gallery]

“Next-generation” Super Res Zoom on the Pixel 7 Pro pushes the 48-megapixel telephoto camera to DSLR-level heights, and Google has shared three sets of samples outside of the keynote.

The main Manhattan sample of One World Trade Center starts 0.5x with the second picture below at 1x. It goes all the way to 30x where you can see the fine detail of the antenna spire. Starting at 20x, the Pixel 7 Pro uses a new machine learning upscaler that’s powered by the Tensor G2. Before that, 15x and up uses Zoom Stabilization so that you can “take handheld photos without a tripod.” 

These camera samples, and two other example sets, are from Google’s Alexander Schiffhauer, who presented and detailed the Pixel 7 Pro’s zoom upgrades at the Made by Google keynote:

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These are some of the last frontiers of smartphone photography, where phones haven’t been able to truly replicate the quality of a DSLR. 

In choosing what camera features to work on, Pixel Camera product manager lead said in Google’s new podcast that it looks at why people are “willing to lug around a 15-pound camera, $10,000 dedicated camera” and work on bringing that functionality to smartphones. Google Research has been involved in Super Res Zoom since 2018 with the feature being a combination of hardware, software, and machine learning.

We also have the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco and Mendocino, which is also in California. Google’s keynote examples focused on being able to see people from far away.

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A Vermeer at National Gallery of Art is not a Vermeer, museum confirms

It has long been designated as dubious. Now it’s official: Girl With a Flute,” one of the National Gallery of Art’s four paintings attributed to Johannes Vermeer, is not, in fact, by Vermeer. Four are now three, and thanks to new combinations of scientific analysis, art historical insight and informed looking, a vexing, long-standing problem has been resolved.

In a news conference Friday, the museum shared the finding that an interdisciplinary team of curators, conservators and scientists has determined that the painting was made “by an associate of Vermeer — not by the Dutch artist himself.”

Vermeer (1632-1675) is one of the world’s most beloved painters. In normal times, people come to the National Gallery expecting to see all its Vermeers on display. It’s hard to justify removing them to the conservation lab for more than a day or two. But the pandemic changed that.

According to curator Marjorie (Betsy) Wieseman, head of the National Gallery’s department of northern European paintings, the museum’s extended closure meant that she and her colleagues had “a unique opportunity to take all four paintings off the wall and have them in the conservation lab at the same time.”

“Other people did needlepoint and learned to bake bread,” she joked in an interview Thursday. “This was our pandemic project.”

The halo of exceptionality around Vermeer’s name is made more luminous by the fact that his output was paltry. There are only about 35 paintings by Vermeer in the world. That partly explains why — although he was esteemed during his lifetime — for two centuries Vermeer was largely forgotten until his rediscovery in the 19th century. (“Girl With a Flute” was rediscovered in 1906 and donated to the NGA by Joseph Widener in 1942.)

Today, Vermeer is not just admired but adored. His life, about which little is known, is the subject of best-selling novels and movies. But the paintings themselves float above the noise and the hype. Incredibly quiet, exquisitely colored, breathtakingly intimate, they stand as a rebuke to the noise and mayhem of modern life and a salve to harried, information-age sensibilities.

Ten Vermeers, but a whole world of Dutch art

With time and space in the lab, the NGA’s researchers, led on the science side by senior imaging scientist John Delaney, subjected the paintings to sophisticated imaging. They were building on a rich history of Vermeer research at the NGA, notably by Melanie Gifford, now-retired research conservator of painting technologies. It wasn’t clear at the outset that they would come up with anything new.

But what resulted, according to Wieseman, was an “exponential increase in our understanding of Vermeer’s working process.” That leap in knowledge, she said, “enabled us to determine that [‘Girl With a Flute’] is not by Vermeer.”

Gifford had analyzed minuscule samples taken from the NGA’s Vermeers, so there was already a lot of data about the paintings, according to Delaney. Now, a combination of microscopic analysis and advanced imaging allowed Delaney and his fellow imaging scientist, Kathryn Dooley, to map the materials Vermeer had used. The techniques included X-ray fluorescence imaging spectroscopy and reflectance hyperspectral imaging, which uses a light-dispersing spectrometer to collect and process information from across the electromagnetic spectrum.

Visitors to a new NGA exhibition, “Vermeer’s Secrets” (Oct. 8-Jan. 8), can see some of what the research team uncovered before the works are sent to the largest-ever Vermeer retrospective at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam (Feb. 10-June 4). The display includes the NGA’s four Vermeer paintings (now three) and two 20th-century forgeries that are still in the gallery’s collection. (How these grotesque parodies were ever taken seriously as Vermeers is difficult to say.)

The research team, which also included Alexandra Libby, Dina Anchin, Lisha Deming Glinsman and Gifford, began by looking at the two masterpieces whose attribution to Vermeer has never been in question. Studying “A Lady Writing” and “Woman Holding a Balance” first, said Delaney, was “a great way to establish a baseline for his practice.”

Among the discoveries was that Vermeer was more vigorous in parts of his process than previously thought. He brushed on his first layers with surprising speed and freedom, at one point even applying a layer of copper-containing material known to hasten the drying process, as if he were in a hurry to move on to the next stage.

“We have this impression of Vermeer being the master of these smooth, satiny surfaces, where you can’t identify individual brushstrokes,” Wieseman said. “But then you look at how he set up that glow on the background wall [depicted in “Woman Holding a Balance”] and it’s exciting, vigorous brushwork. You get a sense of the artist really going at it.”

Lucian Freud captured intimacy, even when his subjects were clothed

The research team then turned to the two smaller, more problematic works, “Girl With the Red Hat” and “Girl With a Flute.” The two paintings have long been considered a pair. Both are “tronies” — the Dutch term for paintings of heads that were not portraits of specific people, but studies of types, often idealized or particularly expressive. (Vermeer’s “Girl With a Pearl Earring” is the most famous example.)

There were two main takeaways: “Girl With a Flute” was made by an artist — perhaps a student, an apprentice in training or an amateur taking lessons from the master — who, in Delaney’s words, “understands the technique but has very limited skill in executing it.”

The research team also concluded that Vermeer probably painted “Girl With the Red Hat” a couple of years later than previously thought, in a period — 1669 rather than 1666-1667 — when he was experimenting with new colors and slightly bolder paint application.

The NGA’s tronies both show young women with similar faces and expressions. Both subjects wear unusual hats and large pearl earrings. The backgrounds of both are rather summarily sketched in. Both show a tapestry on the wall and a chair with lion’s-head finials. And both are painted on wooden panels, which was extremely unusual for Vermeer.

Despite all that, scholars have long doubted whether Vermeer painted “Girl With a Flute.” It just didn’t look good enough. The transitions from light to dark, especially around the face, looked awkward and abrupt. The green shadows were heavily applied, creating what the “Vermeer’s Secrets” wall label calls “a blotchy appearance under the nose and along the jawline.”

In the 1990s, NGA curator Arthur Wheelock, an acknowledged Vermeer expert and recently retired, had “Girl With a Flute” designated as “attributed to Vermeer.” That designation, said Wieseman, was Wheelock’s “way of explaining why it generically looks like Vermeer but qualitatively doesn’t come up to the standard.”

Most scholars agreed, although Wheelock’s colleague at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the late Walter Liedtke, maintained that it probably was a Vermeer, and Wheelock himself later altered his position, saying, “I have concluded that removing “Girl With a Flute” from Vermeer’s oeuvre was too extreme given the complex conservation issues surrounding this image.” (Abrasions to the painting’s surface had made it especially difficult to study.)

The new analyses seem to have confirmed the doubters. “At pretty much every level in the buildup of the painting,” said Wieseman, “it’s ‘close, but no cigar.’ ”

The research team uncovered that, although some of the same materials are present in both paintings (as Gifford had previously established), the paint handling is very different. Where the technique in “Girl With the Red Hat” is subtle and adroit, the application of paint to “Girl With a Flute” is relatively clumsy and coarse.

Instead of using coarsely ground pigments in the underlayers and finely ground pigments for the final layers (as Vermeer did), whoever painted “Girl With a Flute” did the opposite, giving the surface a granular quality. There are even fragments of bristles in the painting’s surface layers, suggesting that the artist was using an old or poorly made brush.

“The artist has a conceptual understanding of how Vermeer built up his paintings but just can’t manage the finesse,” Wieseman said.

There are also defects in the underpaint. For instance, in some of the blue areas, there are “traction crackles” indicating that the surface paint dried before the underlayers. “An experienced artist would know how to mix their pigments so that didn’t happen,” said Wieseman.

Similarly, in areas where white pigment was applied, the artist used too much medium (oil) in the underlayers, causing it to dry in a wrinkled fashion. The artist had to scrape that wrinkling down to get a smoother surface to apply the final layer of paint.

“These are beginner’s mistakes,” Wieseman said. “Vermeer knows why he’s doing things. He knows what the end result will be, whereas with this artist, you just don’t have that sense of understanding.”

If all this is true, it alters our understanding of Vermeer, who has long been considered a lone wolf working without assistants or students. The question becomes: Who was this artist who had access to Vermeer’s studio and used many of the same materials? And what might one day be discovered about their relationship?

The new findings are revelatory, but there will always be an air of enigma around Vermeer.

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Here’s the new 2nd-gen wired Nest Doorbell [Gallery]

Just under a year ago, Google announced that it will be “launching a 2nd generation of Nest Doorbell (wired) in 2022.” Ahead of the October 6 event, which will feature smart home products, the latest version of the Google Home app reveals the new wired Nest Doorbell in its (visual) entirety.

About APK Insight: In this “APK Insight” post, we’ve decompiled the latest version of an application that Google uploaded to the Play Store. When we decompile these files (called APKs, in the case of Android apps), we’re able to see various lines of code within that hint at possible future features. Keep in mind that Google may or may not ever ship these features, and our interpretation of what they are may be imperfect. We’ll try to enable those that are closer to being finished, however, to show you how they’ll look in case that they do ship. With that in mind, read on.


Google Home 2.58 started rolling out via the Play Store yesterday. (Notably, version 2.57, which is needed for redesigned home controls, has not become widely available yet.)

This update contains images revealing that “venus” is the new wired Nest Doorbell. Visually, it has the same pill-shaped design as the current Nest Doorbell (battery).

It’s defined by two circles, with the camera at the top and button/ringer at the very bottom, while an engraved ‘G’ logo sits in-between. In an easter egg, you can again find “hello” in different languages at the side of the camera.

This new wired version is shorter than the battery model, but thicker. Meanwhile, we also see images of a black baseplate and the wedge in case you need a different mounting angle. (The side view above is just the Nest Doorbell, while the one below has the baseplate attached.)

There also are several animations describing the set-up process from:

  • Connecting your home’s chime (wires) to the Chime connector
  • Wedge
  • Wall baseplate

A key aspect of this upcoming model is support for 24/7 continuous video history recording (Nest Aware subscription required). We’re not aware of other specs at this point. The battery-powered version only offers event-based history, while Google kept around the Nest Hello (after a rebrand) until this 2nd-gen doorbell launches.

Thanks to JEB Decompiler, from which some APK Insight teardowns benefit.

Kyle Bradshaw contributed to this post

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Random: Masahiro Sakurai Updated His Awesome Gaming Setup, Here’s A Look

When he’s not making huge games like Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, video game director Masahiro Sakurai is actually playing them. Yes, as you’ve likely already seen before, he’s got an extensive collection of consoles and games (new and old).

In a new post on social media, it seems Sakurai has updated his gaming space. As you can see, all the consoles are neatly ordered – with the Switch on the second shelf, and the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X on top. One thing a lot of his fans also noticed is that the Switch dock is placed on its side.

We’re not too sure about the close proximity of the PlayStation and Xbox, either – but to be fair he’s running an open roof at the very top. Here’s a rough translation of what he had to say about his new setup, courtesy of Google translate:

“I had a made-to-order game machine shelf made. For waste heat, the top plate and the back are removed.When playing, the door is left open. The wiring is passed straight through the hole in the center behind the shelf board. The bottom 2 rows are for controllers and such. The power supply on the back can be turned off individually.”


Update: Sakurai has shared a few other images, noting how he got two of these shelves. And in addition to this, another tweet discusses the Switch on its side. He says it’s not recommended by the manufacturer. Here’s exactly what he had to say:

“There are two of these game shelves…For living room and private room (work room). This door is opaque.”

“There was a reaction to the Switch dock horizontal placement …It’s not recommended by the manufacturer, so do it at your own risk. This is just my personal experience, but I had no problems using it until I cleared Xenoblade Chronicles 3.”

In recent months, Sakurai has also shown off his personal game library – featuring all sorts of retro titles:

What do you think of Sakurai’s new setup? How about the sideways Switch dock? Leave a comment below.



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Gallery: Here’s A Look At Wave Race 64 For The Switch Online Expansion Pack

Nintendo has confirmed its next Switch Online + Expansion N64 release will be Wave Race 64. This jet ski racer was originally released in 1996/97 and is returning later this week on August 19th.

Again, this version will include the Kawasaki banners (like the Wii U release), and in Japan, the game will also feature Rumble Pak support. Nintendo has now also shared multiple screenshots of the NSO version on its official website in Japan.

So, without further ado, here’s a full round up of direct screenshots:

  • Nintendo Announces The Next N64 Game For Switch Online + Expansion Pack

Are you looking forward to this upcoming Switch Online N64 release? Comment down below.



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Anne Heche Career In Pictures: Photo Gallery – Deadline

Anne Heche began acting in dinner theater at age 12 and enjoyed a prolific career in TV and film for the past 30 years. From playing separated-at-birth twins on Another World and fronting Men in Trees to starring in features including Six Days Seven Nights, Psycho and Volcano, she became a familiar face and beloved actress.

Scroll through a photo gallery of her long career by clicking on the image above.

Anne Heche “Not Expected To Survive” After Severe Brain Injury, Will Be Taken Off Life Support

Heche has been adept at comedy and drama, lead and supporting roles and big or small screens. After breaking out on Another World in the late 1980s — in a Daytime Emmy-winning dual role still revered by soap opera fans — she did supporting turns opposite A-list stars in such early-’90s features as I’ll Do Anything and Milk Money before landing a lead opposite Josh Charles in 1995’s Pie in the Sky.

Her career exploded from there.

In just three years, Heche starred or had key roles in Walking and Talking (1996); Donnie Brasco, Volcano, I Know What You Did Last Summer and Wag the Dog (all 1997); and Six Days Seven Nights, Return to Paradise and Psycho (all 1998).

She also recurred on TV’s Ally McBeal (2001) and Everwood (2004-05) before starring as a smug NYC relationship expert in the 2006-08 ABC comedy Men in Trees. From there she co-starred in the 2009-11 HBO dramedy Hung, playing the ex-wife of a high school teacher and coach (Thomas Jane) who takes a side gig as a gigolo to her support their kids.

Anne Heche Lifetime Movie ‘Girl In Room 13’ Still On Track Following Car Crash

Numerous film and TV roles followed, and Heche most recently appeared in the OWN/ABC drama All Rise and wrapped a role in the human-trafficking telefilm Girl in Room 13.



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Gallery – Zinchenko’s first training session | Gallery | News

Oleksandr Zinchenko has joined us on a long-term contract from Manchester City.

The 25-year-old brings huge experience of the Premier League and international football to our squad, having made 128 appearances for Manchester City and playing 52 times for his country Ukraine.

Alex developed through the youth academy at Ukrainian club Shakhtar Donetsk, moving to FC Ufa in Russia in 2015. After 31 appearances with FC Ufa, he signed for Manchester City in June 2016, spending the 2016/17 on loan at Dutch side PSV Eindhoven, before returning to City the following season.

Left-sided player Alex, who is comfortable operating in midfield and defence, has won both the Premier League and League Cup four times. He has also won the FA Cup once and played in the 2021 UEFA Champions League final.

Technical Director Edu said: “I’m very pleased to see how we’re working as a team here in the club. We put a plan together early and Oleksandr Zinchenko was a main focus on our list. We’re pleased to have Alex with us now because he has the attributes which I’m sure are going to put our squad at a different level.”

Mikel Arteta added: “We’re so happy Alex has joined us. He’s a player that I personally know really well and continued to follow him after my time at Manchester City. Alex is a high quality player who will give us options and versatility. It’s not only about the positions he can play but as well, the versatility he will give us in attack and defence. Alex is a person with great human qualities and character, and I’m delighted that everyone has made this huge effort to bring Alex to the club.”

Alex becomes our fifth new signing into our men’s first team squad this pre-season. He joins Gabriel Jesus, Marquinhos, Matt Turner and Fabio Vieira as new arrivals to the club.

Alex has already joined up with the squad at our pre-season training camp in Orlando. His squad number will be announced in due course.

Everyone at Arsenal welcomes Alex and his family to the club.

The transfer is subject to the completion of regulatory processes.

Copyright 2022 The Arsenal Football Club plc. Permission to use quotations from this article is granted subject to appropriate credit being given to www.arsenal.com as the source.

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A look at the Gmail Material You redesign for web [Gallery]

Google announced Material You for Gmail on the web this Thursday and it’s now starting to roll out. One notable addition that the company didn’t announce was the use of Google Sans.

Personally, we’re only seeing the revamp live in our Workspace accounts, but it’s also already appearing on personal Google Accounts.

Font: Google Sans

The Material You redesign screenshots shared at launch used Google Sans Text, but Google Sans is live in Gmail today. Google Sans was detailed in 2018 as a size-optimized version of Product Sans, which is only intended for first-party product logos.

GS Text is “designed for smaller point sizes and perfectly suited for body text.” Google might not be ready to widely use that font yet. 

Screenshot vs. live

Gmail-only view

Opening Quick settings from the gear icon in the top bar reveals the new “Apps in Gmail” preference to customize whether you want to see/use Chat (with Spaces) and/or Meet in an integrated view. Those icons will disappear from the left sidebar based on your selection, while unchecking both will remove that navigation element entirely and load the Gmail-only configuration.

Compose FAB + window

The two rightmost screenshots in the gallery above also show the new shape for the Compose Floating Action Button. It replaces the pill-shaped button and matches the Android app.

Meanwhile, the actual compose window has been ever so slightly tweaked with a light top bar.

Before vs. after

Gmail themes

Lastly, you can still change the background theme so it’s not Material You’s default blue theme. From Quick settings, open the Theme menu. Like before, solid color choices include: Dark, Blue, Soft Gray, Lavender, Rose, Mustard, Wasabi, Spearmint, Seafoam, Dusk, Mahogany, and Eggplant. There are various pictures and you can upload your own image too.

The UI will adapt accordingly, with the Compose FAB white in most instances. There’s no Dynamic Color, but one can only assume that’s coming soon to give online Gmail the full Material You experience.

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iOS 16-inspired Android lockscreen on Google Pixel [Gallery]

Android 12’s double-line clock is one of Google’s most notable expressions of Material You. Following iOS 16’s big emphasis, one concept design imagines how the Android and Pixel lockscreen could evolve with the addition of depth. 

The Android lockscreen on Pixel phones today starts with the day/date in the top-left corner, while weather (condition and temperature) is underneath. Above this At a Glance widget is Android’s status bar where the carrier is noted at the left and the right shows battery percentage and connection statuses. At the bottom of the lockscreen, you get a shortcut to open smart home controls and Google Pay (soon Google Wallet). 

Besides the background, the clock (when there are no notifications) is literally the biggest attraction and it uses Dynamic Color to adapt to your set wallpaper. 

Designer Philip Chang (Twitter + Instagram) took inspiration from iOS 16 to imagine what the Android lockscreen could look like in the future. Namely, depth is applied so that the clock also adapts to what’s in the actual background image. In the example seen above, “10” is displayed behind the rock formations and the seagulls are clearly layered above the “12.” Also note how the hours and minutes are using different colors.

Other examples show the time as if it were appearing on the other side of a bridge, behind a mountain’s peak, and against a waterfall. My favorite example is the hour appearing behind clouds, while the minutes are partially submerged underneath the waves so that visibility is not impacted.

Meanwhile friend of the site RKBDI also imagined different font styles on the Android lockscreen:

This depth effect will certainly be popularized by iOS 16, but it dates back to watchOS 8 with the introduction of the Portraits watch face:

The Portraits watch face uses Portrait mode photos from your iPhone to create a multilayered watch face with depth. You can choose from three different type styles and select up to 24 photos.

On the Apple Watch, a photo with depth data is needed, but iOS 16 just leverages machine learning for a more scalable solution that also allows for non-people backgrounds. A hypothetical Android lockscreen could take the same approach. Google certainly has that depth know-how as seen by Cinematic photos in Google Photos where ML predicts an image’s depth and produces a 3D representation of the scene.

However, another thing for Google to consider is making new live wallpapers that feature a depth effect for the clock. By curating the experience, the company can guarantee that readability of the time is never impacted while also allowing for motion.

Until then, here is more of Philip’s concept:

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